How to File for Divorce in Pennsylvania

Complete guide to Pennsylvania divorce process, forms, and requirements for 2025
90-Day Consent Wait
$300+ Filing Fee
6-Month Residency

Steps to File for Divorce in Pennsylvania

1

Meet Residency Requirements

One spouse must have been a Pennsylvania resident for at least 6 months before filing.
2

File the Complaint

File a Complaint in Divorce with the Court of Common Pleas. PA allows no-fault (mutual consent or 1-year separation) or fault-based grounds.
3

Serve Your Spouse

Your spouse must be served with the complaint. They have 20 days to respond.
4

File Affidavits

After 90 days (mutual consent), file affidavits of consent. Or prove 1-year separation.
5

Complete Economic Claims

Resolve property division, alimony, and other economic matters.
6

Obtain Divorce Decree

After all requirements met, receive your Divorce Decree from the court.

Pennsylvania Divorce Requirements

Residency Requirement

6 Months
One spouse must have been a Pennsylvania resident for at least 6 months.

Waiting Period

90 Days or 1 Year
90 days for mutual consent, or prove 1-year separation for unilateral no-fault.

Filing Fees

$300+
Filing fees vary by county. Generally $300-400. Fee waivers available.

Required Pennsylvania Divorce Forms

Complaint in Divorce
Primary form to initiate divorce
Notice to Defend
Information for defendant
Affidavit of Consent
For mutual consent divorce
Inventory/Appraisement
Property disclosure
Divorce Decree
Final divorce judgment

Filing Options in Pennsylvania

In-Person Filing

  • File at Court of Common Pleas
  • Prothonotary office
  • Self-help center available
  • Pay fee at filing
  • Get file-stamped copies

E-Filing

  • Available in many PA counties
  • File from any location
  • Electronic fee payment
  • Track case online
  • Receive notifications

Types of No-Fault Divorce in Pennsylvania

Mutual Consent (3301c)

  • Both spouses agree
  • 90-day waiting period
  • Both sign affidavits
  • Faster process
  • Lower costs
  • Most common method

Separation (3301d)

  • One spouse can file
  • 1-year separation required
  • No consent needed
  • Longer timeline
  • May be contested
  • For uncooperative spouse

Important Things to Know

Pennsylvania offers two no-fault options: mutual consent (90-day wait) or 1-year separation. Economic claims (property, alimony) must be raised before the divorce is finalized.

Pennsylvania-Specific Considerations

  • Pennsylvania is an equitable distribution state
  • 90-day wait for mutual consent divorce
  • 1-year separation alternative
  • 6-month residency requirement
  • Economic claims must be raised before divorce

Ready to Start Your Pennsylvania Divorce?

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